US4585976A - Beam penetration CRT with internal automatic constant deflection factor and pattern correction - Google Patents
Beam penetration CRT with internal automatic constant deflection factor and pattern correction Download PDFInfo
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- US4585976A US4585976A US06/763,873 US76387385A US4585976A US 4585976 A US4585976 A US 4585976A US 76387385 A US76387385 A US 76387385A US 4585976 A US4585976 A US 4585976A
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- faceplate
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- funnel
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J29/00—Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
- H01J29/46—Arrangements of electrodes and associated parts for generating or controlling the ray or beam, e.g. electron-optical arrangement
- H01J29/70—Arrangements for deflecting ray or beam
- H01J29/72—Arrangements for deflecting ray or beam along one straight line or along two perpendicular straight lines
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J31/00—Cathode ray tubes; Electron beam tubes
- H01J31/08—Cathode ray tubes; Electron beam tubes having a screen on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted, or stored
- H01J31/10—Image or pattern display tubes, i.e. having electrical input and optical output; Flying-spot tubes for scanning purposes
- H01J31/20—Image or pattern display tubes, i.e. having electrical input and optical output; Flying-spot tubes for scanning purposes for displaying images or patterns in two or more colours
- H01J31/208—Image or pattern display tubes, i.e. having electrical input and optical output; Flying-spot tubes for scanning purposes for displaying images or patterns in two or more colours using variable penetration depth of the electron beam in the luminescent layer, e.g. penetrons
Definitions
- a beam penetration color cathode ray tube the color of the trace is controlled by varying the velocity at which the electrons in the electron beam strike the phosphors on the faceplate.
- the required variation in velocity is produced by changing the acceleration potential that the electron beam is subjected to.
- this is achieved by varying a single voltage applied to both the funnel and faceplate.
- split anode it is achieved by varying a separate voltage applied to only the faceplate, while a fixed voltage is constantly applied to the funnel. In either case, presently available phosphors require a change of several thousand volts.
- a long-standing problem with beam penetration color CRT's is that their deflection factors change by as much as forty percent as the trace color is changed. As the color is changed the resulting different electron velocities along the longitudinal (Z) axis of the CRT afford different amounts of time for radial velocities induced by the deflection mechanism to influence the location of the point of impact upon the faceplate; the slower the longitudinal velocity the greater the radial displacement, and the lower the deflection factor (v/cm). If left unaccounted for, these changes cause images written in one color to differ in size from those written in another. Ideally, images would be the same size regardless of the color they were written in.
- any compensation for the horizontal and vertical deflection factors must also produce appropriate composite amounts of compensation along diagonal directions, such as the major diagonals from the center of the faceplate to the corners thereof. Improper diagonal compensation will produce either barrel or pin cushion distortion of the displayed pattern.
- tubes having an expansion mesh the degree of horizontal and vertical expansion can be controlled by variations in the strength of the electric field surrounding the mesh. Such variations in expansion can produce the required deflection factor compensation.
- an expansion mesh does not simply affect only the horizontal and vertical radial velocities in isolation; each radial direction is expanded. Therefore, a proper amount of expansion variation must be selected and produced for each radial direction to ensure distortion free deflection factor compensation.
- a principal object of the invention is to provide a beam penetration color CRT whose horizontal and vertical deflection factors remain constant as the trace color is changed.
- Another object of the invention is to provide a beam penetration color CRT whose horizontal and vertical deflection factors automatically and continuously adjust themselves to remain constant despite arbitrary changes in the applied high voltage that are within the range corresponding to maximum color change.
- a further object of the invention is to provide for an electrostatically deflected beam penetration color CRT with an expansion mesh a constant deflection factor that is also free of color induced barrel or pin cushion distortion.
- a correction lens centered about the axis of the tube and located in the vicinity of an expansion mesh.
- the correction lens is a conductive region on the inside of conical portions at the entrance to the funnel region of the CRT envelope.
- the correction lens is electrically connected to the split anode faceplate, and both receive the same switched high voltage.
- the shape of the correction lens is chosen to interact with the effect of the expansion mesh to produce compensatory changes in the horizontal, vertical and diagonal radial velocities (i.e., change the amount of expansion in those directions).
- a magnetically deflected split anode beam penetration CRT has its horizontal and vertical deflection factors compensated by a correction lens centered about the axis of the tube and located on the inside of the neck of the CRT near the entrance end of the deflection yoke.
- the voltage on the correction lens is changed in conjunction with the high voltage for the faceplate.
- the axial velocity of the electron beam in the magnetic deflection region is varied to compensate for changes in the axial velocity in the region of the faceplate. This varies the amount of deflection in the magnetic deflection region to produce constant overall deflection factors.
- FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an electrostatically deflected beam penetration color CRT having an expansion mesh wherein the amounts of radial expansion are controlled by a correction lens element located in the vicinity of the expansion mesh and wherein the horizontal and vertical deflection factors remain constant and the displayed pattern is free of distortion, despite changes in trace color.
- FIG. 2 is a cut-away view of a prior art beam penetration color CRT, with ray traces, illustrating the nature of the problem that produces the color dependent change in deflection factor.
- FIG. 3 is a cut-away view of the CRT of FIG. 1.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B are each a two dimensional rendition of the shape of the gap between the correction lens element and the funnel coating in the CRT of FIG. 1.
- FIGS. 5A and 5B are perspective views of the three dimensional shape and location of the shape shown in FIGS. 4A and 4B.
- FIG. 6 is a cut-away view of the CRT of FIG. 1, with ray traces illustrating the nature of the compensation applied to correct the color dependent deflection factor error illustrated in FIG. 2.
- FIG. 7 is a cut-away view of a conventional electrostatically deflected monochrome CRT having an expansion mesh, showing how the isopotential lines in the internal electric field produce the radial expansion afforded by the expansion mesh.
- FIG. 8 is a cut-away view of a conventional electrostatically deflected split anode beam penetration color CRT having an expansion mesh, showing how the isopotential lines in the internal electric fields produce the color dependent deflection factor variation.
- FIG. 9 is a cut-away view of an electrostatically deflected split anode beam penetration color CRT having an expansion mesh, and in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention, also having a correction lens in the vicinity of the expansion mesh, and illustrates how the correction lens changes the shape of the electric field around the expansion mesh to compensate for color induced deflection factor variations.
- FIG. 10 is a cut-away view of a magnetically deflected CRT without an expansion mesh, and in accordance with an alternate embodiment of the invention, having a correction lens element located at the entrance of the region of magnetic deflection.
- FIG. 1 An electrostatically deflected beam penetration color CRT 1 constructed in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention is depicted in FIG. 1.
- an expansion mesh (not itself visible) supported upon a "mesh can" 5.
- a four-lobed slightly conical conductive correction lens element 3 Upon the inside of the CRT's envelope, near the expansion mesh and at the entrance of the "funnel", is deposited a four-lobed slightly conical conductive correction lens element 3.
- the correction lens 3 is electrically connected to the "split anode” facepate by an external conductor (not shown).
- a dielectric coated gap 4 of essentially constant width separates the conductive correction lens 3 from the conductive coating 2 inside the remaining portion of the CRT funnel.
- the funnel coating 2 is conventional, except that it complements the shape of the correction lens 3 through the dielectric coated gap 4.
- the funnel coating 2 is electrically isolated from the faceplate of the CRT 1.
- the CRT 1 is intended for use in a small high quality color graphic display device. It has a viewing area approximately five inches wide (“horizontal”) by four inches high (“vertical”) and is approximately fifteen inches in length. To promote clarity in depicting the various shapes, the CRT 1 has been illustrated as rotated one quarter turn about its longitudinal axis, so that the spatial relation between the horizontal and vertical axes appears interchanged. In this way the broader side of the tube is depicted, allowing a less cramped rendition of the illustrated features.
- the particular CRT of FIG. 1 is not intended for use in oscillographic applications requiring a maximum vertical deflection sensitivity, but rather in a graphics application best served by nearly equal horizontal and vertical deflection sensitivities. In this particular tube, therefore, horizontal deflection is performed first (furthest from the faceplate) followed by vertical deflection. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that the invention is equally applicable to CRT's designed for use where one axis of deflection is to be considerably more sensitive than the other.
- FIG. 2 depicts a portion of a conventional split anode beam penetration color CRT 7.
- a CRT 7 the interior of the funnel portion of the envelope 8 is coated with a conductive coating 10 extending from ahead of the expansion mesh 11 to fairly near the faceplate.
- a separate conductive region 9 is deposited over the phosphors upon the faceplate.
- the conductive funnel coating 10 is connected to a source of fixed high voltage, while the conductive faceplate coating 9 is connected to a source of variable high voltage.
- Dotted lines 12a-d represent ray traces for various amounts of deflection a-d, each with the faceplate operating at plus fifteen kilovolts (for a green trace).
- the ray traces 12a-d form an undistorted pattern produced at some deflection factor.
- the solid line ray traces 13a-d produced under conditions differing only in that the faceplate voltage has been lowered to plus nine kilovolts (for a red trace).
- the ray traces 12a-d and 13a-d are essentially the same for the first two thirds of their travel after leaving the expansion mesh. Each is accelerated by substantially the same amount by the conductive coating 10, and the radial velocities, once induced by the deflection plates and expansion mesh, remain unchanged during that portion of travel.
- the velocity of the electrons in the direction parallel to the longitudinal axis remains, once accelerated by conductive coating 10, essentially constant until the electrons strike the faceplate.
- Their radial velocities remain constant after leaving the region of the expansion mesh.
- the ray traces 12a-d are thus essentially straight lines.
- FIG. 3 is a top cut-away view of a CRT 14 similar to that of FIG. 2, but constructed in accordance with FIG. 1.
- conductive coatings 17 corresponding to correction lens 3 of FIG. 1
- 15 corresponding to funnel coating 2
- 16 the "split anode” at the faceplate.
- Any conventional means may be used to make electrical contact with the correction lens coating 17, including resilient fingers, "pop throughs” and metal “anode buttons”.
- a layer 18 of insulating "green dag” is applied over the gap 4 separating conductive coatings 17 and 15.
- a similar insulting layer is applied over the separation between the funnel coating 15 and the faceplate coating 16. In the present example the width of the gap 4 is approximately four tenths of an inch.
- a conductor 19 connects the funnel coating 15 to a fixed high voltage power supply, which in the present example is plus fifteen kilovolts.
- Another conductor 20 connects both the faceplate coating 16 and the correction lens coating 17 to a source of variable high voltage, which in the present example can range from plus nine to plus fifteen kilovolts, including various values inbetween.
- an expansion mesh 21 located at the exit end of an electron gun assembly 22.
- the interior portion of the envelope upon which the correction lens 17 is deposited is made up of two conical surfaces.
- the left-hand portion of the funnel in the vicinity of the gap 4 forms a portion of an eight degree cone, while the adjoining portion just to the left (the so-called "reducer") forms a portion of a thirty-eight degree cone.
- a convenient point of reference in this figure, for things to be depicted in subsequent figures, is the circle (in three dimensions) formed by the intersection of the two conical surfaces.
- the tip of the expansion mesh 21 extends beyond the plane of that circular line of intersection, and along the longitudinal axis of the tube, by approximately two tenths of an inch.
- the shape of the narrowest opening in thirty-eight degree portion of the correction coating 17 is of little concern, if any, since it is so far removed from the electrons emanating from the expansion mesh 21. That shape may conveniently be circular.
- the shape of the intersection of the two conical surfaces has already been described as circular.
- the shape of the remaining right-hand edge (as viewed in FIG. 3) of the eight degree conical surface of the correction lens 17, and the corresponding shape of the left-hand edge of the conductive funnel coating 15, are not so easily described.
- a four-lobed shape is involved. This four-lobed shape will be described in terms of the shape of the gap 4 between the correction lens 17 and funnel coating 15. This is because the three dimensional shape of the gap 4 is much more readily depicted than the shape of either of the things it separates. It is clear, however, that each of the remaining shapes can be clearly and unambiguously understood and appreciated from an understanding of the shape of the gap 4.
- the gap 4 is not confined to only the eight degree conical surface, but also extends at four places onto a portion of the thirty-eight degree conical surface.
- the gap 4 if thought of as a surface in its own right, has four "bent tabs" 24-27. As far as is known, these bent regions of the gap have no specially desirable properties owing to their being bent. What happened is that the in and out excursion of the four lobes needed to be certain lengths, and be particularly positioned relative to the expansion mesh, to correctly produce the desired result.
- the intersection of the reducer and the funnel just happened to lie within the range of those excursions, so portions of the lobes ended up bent.
- the present tube is a modification of an existing CRT, and a redesign of the location of the expansion mesh or of the shape of the bottle to eliminate those bends was outside the scope of the project. With a different tube the "bent tabs" in the shape of the gap might well be absent, or, more pronounced. In the present tube the bends were simply ignored, with no apparent ill effects.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B show, for the particular CRT of FIGS. 1 and 3, the exact shape of the gap 4. What is shown is a planar shape, that if constructed upon a suitable medium, such as a sheet of paper or mylar, then cut out, joined at its ends and bent along the dotted lines, forms the actual three dimensional shape of the gap 4. That is, FIGS. 4A and 4B are essentially a recipe for creating a shape, most of which lies on the surface of an eight degree cone.
- dotted line 23 is a circle of radius 10.7", and corresponds to the circular line of intersection between the two cones.
- the angle ⁇ is approximately fifty-one degrees, and was chosen to produce an eight degree cone.
- To construct the shape of FIG. 4B proceeds as follows. Construct adjacent segments of concentric large circles of the following radii: 10.5"; 10.7"; 10.9"; 11.35"; 11.75". Each segment must subtend the same 51° central angle. Divide the central angle into four equal portions corresponding to the horizontal and vertical axes. Subdivide each of the four equal portions to correspond to the location of its major diagonal (determined by the aspect ratio). In FIG. 4A the angle ⁇ is less than ⁇ owing to the differing symetries about the different major diagonals.
- FIGS. 5A and 5B show the orientation of the gap 4 in the CRT of FIGS. 1 and 3. This is important, since it will be observed that the lobes marked V are one quarter of an inch longer than those marked H.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B pertain to a CRT envelope of a certain size and shape and having a particular expansion mesh. Those skilled in the art, however, will be able to draw upon this example to perform corresponding operations for different tubes with different expansion meshes, once the shape of the correction lens is known. Further below, a method is briefly discussed for selecting the shape of a correction lens for any particular tube.
- Both the conductive correction lens and the conductive funnel coating are formed by vapor deposition of aluminum.
- a masking fixture having the shape of the gap is created from thin stainless steel. It is held in place by gravity against the interior of the reducer. It is thin enough to sufficiently conform to any slight eccentricity in the conical surfaces.
- the bottle, less faceplate and electron gun, is placed in the aluminization fixture and the conductive coatings (3 and 2, or 17 and 15) are deposited. Afterwards, the coating 18 of insulating green dag may be applied by any convenient means, including hand painting with a brush.
- FIG. 6 illustrates the compensatory influence the correction lens 17 has upon the electron beam as it leaves the expansion mesh 21.
- dotted lines 28a-d represent ray traces for various amounts of deflection while the split anode faceplate 16 is at the same high voltage (+15 kv) as the conductive funnel coating 15.
- Solid line ray traces 29a-d represent the same amounts of deflection when the voltage at the split anode faceplate is lowered to +9 kv. Note that for each of the various amounts of initial deflection a-d the final point of impact upon the faceplate remains unchanged, despite the change in faceplate voltage.
- the correction lens 17 When the faceplate 16 is operated at the same potential as the funnel coating 15, the correction lens 17 exhibits the same potential, also. The net effect is as if the entire tube had one unified interior conductive coating, with neither a separate split anode nor a separate correction lens.
- the expansion mesh 21 operates as it normally does. That is, there is a high gradient electric field between the region just outside the expansion mesh (at say +100 v) and the adjacent portion of the bottle (+15 kv). This high gradient field produces maximum "magnification" by the expansion mesh 21.
- the concomitant reduction of potential at the correction lens 17 reduces the gradient of the electric field surrounding the expansion mesh 21.
- the reduction is chosen to be an amount that is restored by the progressive axial deceleration and slight radial acceleration experienced by the electron beam as it approaches the faceplate.
- the amount of reduction automatically varies correctly as the voltage applied to the faceplate is changed, even if by arbitrary amounts.
- V 1 be the potential of the region inside and at the surface of the expansion mesh
- V 2 be the potential in the vicinity of the region exterior to the expansion mesh
- ⁇ 1 be the complement of the angle between the path of an electron about to pass through the mesh and a line tangent to the mesh at the point of passage;
- ⁇ 2 be the complement of the angle between the path of an electron just past the mesh and a line tangent to the mesh at the point of passage.
- the potential on the surface of the expansion mesh is approximately +100 v.
- the principle potential outside the expansion mesh is that possessed by the funnel coating 2 or 15.
- the purpose of the correction lens is first, to act at high voltages like the funnel coating in a conventional split anode beam penetration CRT, and second, to act at low voltages to diminish the effective value of V 2 in Eq. (1), by partially shielding the expansion mesh 21 from the influence of the high voltage on the funnel coating with an intervening region at the lower voltage. Assuming a constant distance between a point of interest on the expansion mesh and the nearest point on the funnel coating, the greater the physical separation at the intervening lower voltage, the greater the shielding and the greater the dimunition of the effective value of V 2 .
- the degrees of demagnification in the horizontal and vertical axes produced upon leaving the expansion mesh in any given radial location are functions of at least two things: (1) the width of the correction lens in that radial direction; and (2), how far from the center of expansion mesh along that radial direction the beam leaves the mesh.
- the second condition is important for the same reason as the first: it influences the degree of separation of that portion of the mesh from the high voltage funnel coating 2 or 15, and therefore the effective value of V 2 .
- condition (2) (how far from center on the mesh the beam exits) is essentially a function of the extent the deflection plates have influenced the beam before it passes through the expansion mesh.
- the correction lens described herein can be shaped so that for any given tube exact correction occurs, that shape depends in part upon the size and shape of the CRT envelope. If little or no attention is paid to tolerances for the envelope, a given shape may not correct exactly each tube wherein it is used, even though those tubes are each of the same type and are each directly replaceable by the other. If adequate tolerances for the size and shape of the envelope are not to be maintained, it may be desirable to equip the deflection amplifier circuitry with an adjustable amount of electrically variable gain, anyway. However, such variability need only amount to a change in gain of a few percent, and would still be easier than providing a forty percent change. The exact amount of the gain variation would be adjusted in a calibration process once the CRT was installed, as its amount would be a function of that particular CRT.
- FIGS. 7-9 A more detailed explanation of the principles of the operation of the correction lens element is given in FIGS. 7-9.
- FIG. 7 shows a cut-away view of a conventional electrostatically deflected CRT 30 having an expansion mesh 31.
- the expansion mesh 31 is at about +100 v, while the funnel coating 32 and faceplate 33 are each at +15 kv.
- the various isopotential lines for the electric field between the expansion mesh 31 and the rest of the tube are found closest to the expansion mesh 31.
- the majority of the expansion performed for ray traces 34a-d occurs by the time an electron in the ray reaches the 11.9 kv isopotential line. All but a very small amount of expansion is complete by the time the 13.9 kv isopotential line is reached. From that point on the electrons are essentially in a drift space, and their trajectories are almost perfect straight lines.
- FIG. 8 shows a cut-away view of a CRT 35 similar to the CRT 30 of FIG. 7, save for the introduction of a split anode faceplate 38 isolated from the funnel coating 37.
- the expansion mesh 36 of FIG. 8 is the same as the expansion mesh 31 of FIG. 7, and is surrounded by (perhaps not exactly, but virtually) the same electric field. Therefore the same amounts of expansion for given amounts of deflection occurs, up until the end of the drift space, for both the CRT 35 of FIG. 8 and CRT 30 of FIG. 7.
- the drift space of the CRT 35 of FIG. 8 ends well before the faceplate 38, upon encountering the curved isopotential lines of the electric field in the vicinity of the reduced voltage faceplate 38. It is in this region that the electrons in the various rays 39a-d are slightly accelerated radially and greatly decelerated axially.
- the various legends ⁇ a- ⁇ d indicate the amounts of error in the resulting trace positions.
- FIG. 9 shows how an instance of the invention operates to modify and combine aspects of FIGS. 7 and 8.
- An electrostrically deflected beam penetration color CRT 40 includes a conductive correction lens element 41 electrically connected to a split anode faceplate 43. Between the two, and electrically isolated from each, is a conductive funnel coating 42. The left-hand portion of FIG. 9 shows the isopotential lines of the electric field surrounding the expansion mesh 44. In contrast with the corresponding fields of FIGS. 7 and 8, the field around the expansion mesh 44 of FIG. 9 exhibits a lesser field gradient and a lesser degree of curvature.
- rays 45a-d are each expanded by a lesser amount than their counterparts 39a-d of FIG. 8.
- the axial deceleration and slight radial acceleration encountered by rays 45a-d as they pass through the isopotential lines surrounding the faceplate 43 counteract the reduced amounts of expansion to produce points of impact that are the same as for rays 34a-d of FIG. 7 (assuming a-d represent the same amounts of initial deflection).
- the curved isopotential lines of the electric field surrounding the expansion mesh 44 and those in the vicinity of the faceplate 43 can each be considered a lens.
- the "power" of each lens is determined by the difference in voltage of the elements that form the lens, and by the geometries of those elements. Since the voltages for elements 41 and 43 are equal, vary together, and always greater than the mesh voltage and less than or equal to the funnel voltage, decreasing the voltage difference (between elements 41 and 44) for the "expansion mesh lens" lowers the power of that lens, while that same change in potential (but now between elements 42 and 43) increases the power of the "faceplate lens." The change in the powers of these lenses are complicated functions of the voltage differences. Very roughly speaking, the power is the ability of the field to accelerate or decelerate electrons.
- the function describing the decrease in radial acceleration by the mesh lens produced by a drop in correction element voltage is similar in nature to the functions describing the deceleration in axial velocity and increase in radial velocity by the faceplate lens.
- the mesh lens function can be "scaled" to match combined effects of the faceplate lens functions, not just at the extreme lowest voltage, but at intervening values as well. Thereafter, variations in one lens are automatically offset by a complementary variation in the other lens, for any given change in voltage.
- the electric field between the funnel coating 42 and the faceplate 43 has its greatest curvature at the corners of the faceplate. That is, the lines of electric force (not the isopotential lines) emanating from the funnel coating to the faceplate are crowded together as the envelope bends in the region where the surfaces that are the "vertical side” and “horizontal side” meet to form an edge.
- the faceplate lens therefore has its greatest "power" in the corners. Nevertheless, it appears fairly certain that for the particular tube of the present example this did not contribute significantly to pattern distortion experienced with certain early correction element shapes.
- the mesh lens For rays directed into the corner regions the mesh lens must achieve a nominal amount of demagnification commensurate with that for the major axes.
- the four regions marked "D" on FIGS. 4B and 5B are the locations on the correction lens element corresponding to the corners of the faceplate. While on the one hand one is tempted to argue that those locations on the correction lens element 41/17/3 ought to produce a minimum demagnification in the operation of the expansion mesh, owing to their minimum width, two other considerations must also be remembered. First, the extreme location on the expansion mesh from which those diagonal rays emanate place them closest to the field emanating from the funnel coating, so that smaller intervening fields still have a pronounced effect.
- the points of minimum width marked "D" are not there all by their lonesome selves. They are surrounded on each side by fairly steep-sided lobes. These sides interact with the locations marked "D", so that the field disturbance at the mesh for the diagonals would seem to be the result of a correction element width that "appears wider than it really is.” For these two reasons, therefore, the described shape for the correction lens element 41/17/3 does indeed produce a nominal amount of demagnification for maximally deflected diagonal rays, commensurate with that for other directions of deflection.
- the shape of the edge of the correction lens element either is or resembles a projection of the rectangular shape of the faceplate onto the conical surface adjoining the funnel portion of the CRT envelope.
- a right section of a right eight degree cone of dimensions corresponding to the CRT envelope in the vicinity of the expansion mesh. Select a first point lying along the axis of the conical section, probably one closer to the narrower end of the section than to the wider end.
- the principles of the present invention have been employed in modifying the behavior of an expansion mesh in another electrostatically deflected CRT having an expansion mesh.
- That CRT was a monochrome CRT operating at a fixed acceleration potential, and was of a design that did not originally include an expansion mesh. It was desired to put a standard and readily available expansion mesh into the tube to increase its deflection sensitivity. The desired increase was achieved, but at the expense of a perceptible amount of pattern distortion caused by an improper amount of expansion along diagonal directions. The distortion was removed by the use of a correction lens element essentially similar to that which has been described, but operated at a fixed potential.
- correction lens element described herein need not necessarily be a conductive coating upon the inside of the CRT envelope, although that will often be the most convenient method.
- Other means influencing the trajectory of the electron beam could be used, including shapes formed from sheet metal and suitably disposed about the path of the beam.
- metal tabs were attached to the mesh can by insulating standoffs.
- FIG. 10 shows a magnetically deflected beam penetration color CRT 46 having a split anode faceplate 47 separated from a funnel coating 48.
- a conductor 49 connects the split anode faceplate 47 to a first variable high voltage source (not shown), while another conductor 50 connects the funnel coating 48 to a fixed source of high voltage (also not shown).
- An electron gun assembly (not shown) in the neck of CRT 46 supplies a focused electron beam 51.
- a magnetic deflection yoke assembly 52 contains both horizontal and vertical deflection coils, to be driven by suitable deflection amplifiers (not shown).
- trace color changes are achieved by altering the positive high voltage applied to the split anode faceplate.
- the funnel coating operates at a fixed high voltage of plus twenty kilovolts, and that the split anode faceplate operates over the range of from plus ten kilovolts to plus twenty kilovolts.
- Broken line 53 denotes a ray trace for an initial given amount of deflection of the electron beam 51, assuming that the faceplate is raised to its full potential of plus twenty thousand volts.
- dotted line 54 denotes the resulting ray trace, for the same given amount of initial deflection as for ray trace 53, when the split anode faceplate 47 is lowered to plus ten thousand volts.
- the deflection process induces a radial velocity into the electron beam.
- the reduced faceplate voltage reduces the axial velocity of the beam as it nears the faceplate.
- the resulting increase in transit time allows the radial velocity to produce a greater displacement prior to impact, resulting in greater deflection.
- a correction lens 55 in the form of an annular conductive surface located inside the neck of the CRT 46, centered on the path of the electron beam 51 and axially positioned prior to where the electron beam 51 enters the region of magnetic deflection produced by the yoke 52.
- a conductor 56 connects the correction lens 55 to a second variable high voltage source (not shown).
- the first and second high voltage sources vary simultaneously in the following manner.
- a positive high voltage applied to the correction lens 55 increases.
- the increase in voltage to the correction lens axially accelerates the electron beam 51 by the amount required to maintain a constant transit time.
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US06/763,873 US4585976A (en) | 1982-01-19 | 1985-08-07 | Beam penetration CRT with internal automatic constant deflection factor and pattern correction |
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US34068382A | 1982-01-19 | 1982-01-19 | |
US06/763,873 US4585976A (en) | 1982-01-19 | 1985-08-07 | Beam penetration CRT with internal automatic constant deflection factor and pattern correction |
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Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US6504296B2 (en) * | 1998-12-28 | 2003-01-07 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Tube neck for cathode ray tube |
US6590352B1 (en) * | 2002-04-30 | 2003-07-08 | Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd. | Electrical grounding of CRT antistatic/antireflective coating |
US20040190104A1 (en) * | 2001-11-15 | 2004-09-30 | Chunghwa Pictures Tubes, Ltd. | Application of multi-layer antistatic/antireflective coating to video display screen by sputtering |
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US4371808A (en) * | 1979-12-07 | 1983-02-01 | Iwatsu Electric Co., Ltd. | One-gun two-beam cathode ray tube |
US4338548A (en) * | 1980-01-30 | 1982-07-06 | Control Data Corporation | Unipotential lens assembly for charged particle beam tubes and method for applying correction potentials thereto |
US4352043A (en) * | 1980-02-27 | 1982-09-28 | The General Electric Company Limited | Cathodoluminescent light sources and electric lighting arrangements including such sources |
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Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US6504296B2 (en) * | 1998-12-28 | 2003-01-07 | Siemens Aktiengesellschaft | Tube neck for cathode ray tube |
US20040190104A1 (en) * | 2001-11-15 | 2004-09-30 | Chunghwa Pictures Tubes, Ltd. | Application of multi-layer antistatic/antireflective coating to video display screen by sputtering |
US20050221097A1 (en) * | 2001-11-15 | 2005-10-06 | Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd. | Application of multi-layer antistatic/antireflective coating to video display screen by sputtering |
US6590352B1 (en) * | 2002-04-30 | 2003-07-08 | Chunghwa Picture Tubes, Ltd. | Electrical grounding of CRT antistatic/antireflective coating |
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